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German Union Aims for Breakthrough at Tesla Berlin Plant

BERLIN, March 4 (Reuters) - Germany's ​top industrial union is fighting for more influence at ‌Tesla's gigafactory outside Berlin, where staff are voting for a new works council after a campaign marked by mud-slinging and legal challenges.

Voting began on ​Monday at Tesla's Gruenheide plant, the U.S. electric car maker's ​only European production site, with results expected later Wednesday.

The ⁠current council is dominated by non-union members. The IG Metall ​union is fielding 116 candidates in a bid to win a ​simple majority - 19 of 37 seats. The union secured 16 in the last election two years ago, when the council had 39 seats.

IG Metall has ​accused management of stoking anti-union sentiment. Plant director Andre Thierig has ​countered that the union is focused solely on boosting IG Metall membership.

"We are ‌very ⁠satisfied with our election campaign. We are running with a great team and our issues are clearly striking a chord with our colleagues," IG Metall's lead candidate Laura Arndt said in a ​statement to Reuters.

Works ​councils, elected by ⁠staff, are a cornerstone of German labour relations, representing employees in talks with management.

IG Metall dominates ​councils across German carmakers - including Volkswagen , BMW and ​Mercedes - but ⁠remains the underdog at Tesla, whose CEO Elon Musk is outspoken in his criticism of unions.

Tensions peaked in February when Tesla accused an ⁠IG ​Metall trade unionist of secretly recording a ​works council meeting and filed a criminal complaint.

IG Metall dismissed the allegation as a "calculated ​lie".

Reporting by Rachel More and Christina Amann. Editing by Mark Potter

Source: Reuters


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